I think it may have actually been produced by Sherwood Schwartz, or it seems like the same caliber of show.I wouldn't be surprised if another show used the same production house
I think it may have actually been produced by Sherwood Schwartz, or it seems like the same caliber of show.I wouldn't be surprised if another show used the same production house
For some reason I remember the theme song...
It's about time, it's about space, it's about two men in the strangest place.
The Big Bang Theory does something similar, though it's just this frenetic narrative about the beginnings of the world, not about the show itself. And then there's All In The Family with its ode to days gone by, and the theme to The Courtship of Eddie's Father where we hear about Dad's "best friend":Indeed, sitcoms in the 60’s and even into the 70’s liked to describe the situation of the comedy at the beginnings. I must think this was essential at maintaining the audience.
I thought it was one episodeEmilys reasons why not from 2006. Had a big advertising campaign, then it only lasted 2 episodes!
May have been. I never saw it, but from what I heard, the character and the entire premise were inherently unlikable. The premise of the show was that Emily looked for five reasons not to date any given man, and if she found five reasons, she broke off the relationship. Not the best concept for a successful TV comedy.I thought it was one episode
I remember She's the Sherriff and Out of This World as She's the Sherriff aired on fox 17 and I didn't see Out Of This World till it started airing on Fox 17 (it aired on ABC 5 for the first 2 seasons)Speaking of "idiotic" sitcoms, how about NBC's infamous "Prime Time Starts at 7:30" sitcom block during the 1987-88 season?
If you remember, the shows in rotation included She's The Sheriff, Out of This World, Marblehead Manor, You Can't Take it With You, and We Got It Made. Depending on where you lived at the time, and particularly if you lived in a market with a NBC-owned station (which, at the time, would have been just NYC, LA, Chicago, DC, Cleveland, and Denver) or WCAU in Philly (which was a CBS O&O at the time), these shows aired on a different weeknight and/or on weekends. By the following TV season, only She's the Sheriff and Out of the World lasted beyond a season (OOTW went five seasons, in all), and was ultimately was replaced (by most of the NBC O&Os and WCAU) by a revival of the nighttime Family Feud, with Ray Combs as host.
The mid-to-late 80s, and heading into the early '90s, it was a prime era for first-run syndication, especially when it came to sitcoms. Not just with original shows, also many others that were originally cancelled by a network but revived and had more-lengthier runs in first-run syndication--Still/It's a Living, Mama's Family, Charles in Charge, Webster, Silver Spoons, and Too Close for Comfort.
My NBC station has shown Wheel of Fortune in that time slot from 1985 up until the present day, so I missed most of this. I do remember She's the Sherriff, so someone in the market must have shown it. We Got It Made I remember from the NBC days, I don't think I ever saw any of the syndicated version.Speaking of "idiotic" sitcoms, how about NBC's infamous "Prime Time Starts at 7:30" sitcom block during the 1987-88 season?
If you remember, the shows in rotation included She's The Sheriff, Out of This World, Marblehead Manor, You Can't Take it With You, and We Got It Made. Depending on where you lived at the time, and particularly if you lived in a market with a NBC-owned station (which, at the time, would have been just NYC, LA, Chicago, DC, Cleveland, and Denver) or WCAU in Philly (which was a CBS O&O at the time), these shows aired on a different weeknight and/or on weekends. By the following TV season, only She's the Sheriff and Out of the World lasted beyond a season (OOTW went five seasons, in all), and was ultimately was replaced (by most of the NBC O&Os and WCAU) by a revival of the nighttime Family Feud, with Ray Combs as host.
The mid-to-late 80s, and heading into the early '90s, it was a prime era for first-run syndication, especially when it came to sitcoms. Not just with original shows, also many others that were originally cancelled by a network but revived and had more-lengthier runs in first-run syndication--Still/It's a Living, Mama's Family, Charles in Charge, Webster, Silver Spoons, and Too Close for Comfort.
I had a big crush on Cathy Apple.Apples Way on CBS. This thread reminded me of it. I see it started as a mid-season replacement in 1974 and then was canceled mid-season 1975 I see from Wikipedia.
I was about 5 years old at the time I think the main allure of it for me was that the family lived in a house with a waterwheel built into it! Pretty cool to my 5yo self. I had an Apples Way lunch box I used throughout elementary school.
The waterwheel house I recall showing up in an episode of another series later on. May have been either the bionic woman or man but not sure.
Speaking of "idiotic" sitcoms, how about NBC's infamous "Prime Time Starts at 7:30" sitcom block during the 1987-88 season?
If you remember, the shows in rotation included She's The Sheriff, Out of This World, Marblehead Manor, You Can't Take it With You, and We Got It Made. Depending on where you lived at the time, and particularly if you lived in a market with a NBC-owned station (which, at the time, would have been just NYC, LA, Chicago, DC, Cleveland, and Denver) or WCAU in Philly (which was a CBS O&O at the time), these shows aired on a different weeknight and/or on weekends. By the following TV season, only She's the Sheriff and Out of the World lasted beyond a season (OOTW went five seasons, in all), and was ultimately was replaced (by most of the NBC O&Os and WCAU) by a revival of the nighttime Family Feud, with Ray Combs as host.
The mid-to-late 80s, and heading into the early '90s, it was a prime era for first-run syndication, especially when it came to sitcoms. Not just with original shows, also many others that were originally cancelled by a network but revived and had more-lengthier runs in first-run syndication--Still/It's a Living, Mama's Family, Charles in Charge, Webster, Silver Spoons, and Too Close for Comfort.
"The Corner Bar" I definitely watched.Just curious. Did all you posters actually watch the shows you're filling this thread with? I suppose that remembering seeing a promo is kind of like remembering the show, but you guys who've mentioned "You're in the Picture" and "Turn On" .... Did you really watch them or have you just read about them at some point over the decades?